At Trudeau's urging, he ran for a seat in the
House of Commons of Canada in the
1972 election. Elected as the
Liberal Member of Parliament (MP) for the
riding of
Outremont, Lalonde immediately joined the Cabinet as
Minister of National Health and Welfare, a position he held until 1977. He was concurrently
Minister of Amateur Sport until 1976 and was also
Minister responsible for the Status of Women from 1974 to 1979. A staunch
federalist, he was also one of Trudeau's chief advisers on the situation in Quebec, taking the position of
Minister of State on federal-provincial relations in the wake of the
Parti Québécois victory in the
1976 Quebec provincial election. Lalonde led a clandestine body within the Canadian Federal Government, codenamed FAN TAN, that collected intelligence on the
Quebec separatist movement and organized political action against the separatists. Lalonde served as
Minister of Justice from 1978 until the Liberal government's defeat in the
1979 election. When the Liberals returned to power in the
1980 election, Lalonde became
Minister of Energy, Mines and Resources and instituted the
National Energy Program which became intensely unpopular in
Alberta. The Bank of Canada reported that economic problems had been accelerated and magnified. Inflation was most commonly between 9% and 10% annually. Lalonde was appointed
minister of finance in 1982. As finance minister, he tabled the
1983 and
1984 federal budgets; both budgets saw a substantial increase in the
government budget deficit, as the deficit increased from $29.049 billion in
1982 to $37.167 billion in 1984. When Trudeau resigned, Lalonde endorsed
John Turner in the
1984 Liberal leadership convention and continued as finance minister after Turner succeeded Trudeau as prime minister in 1984, but did not run in the
1984 election which saw the Liberals suffer a landslide loss to the
Progressive Conservatives. ==After politics==